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Cardiovascular System

Cardiovascular System. Week 11 Dr. Walid Daoud A. Professor. Arterial Blood Pressure ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________. Factors which determine ABP & Pulse P.: F = ∆ P

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Cardiovascular System

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  1. Cardiovascular System Week 11 Dr. Walid Daoud A. Professor

  2. Arterial Blood Pressure____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Factors which determine ABP & Pulse P.: F = ∆ P R CO = ABP – Rt. Atrial P (zero) TPR CO = ABP TPR ABP = CO x TPR = SV x HR x TPR

  3. Arterial Blood Pressure____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Factors which determine ABP & Pulse P.: 1-Stroke volume: SV ↑ SP more than DP → ↑ pulse P. 2-Heart rate: ↑ HR ↑ DP due to shortening of diastole. 3-Total peripheral resistance: ↑ TPR ↑ DP. 4-Elasticity of aorta and arteries: Atheroscerosis: ↑ SP and ↓ DP → ↑ Pulse pressure. SP is determined by SV mainly. DP is determined by TPR mainly.

  4. Regulation of ABP____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ABP is regulated by 3 mechanisms: 1-Nervous mechanisms (Rapid). 2-Capillary fluid shift mechanism (Intermediate) 3-Hormonal and renal mechanisms (Slow).

  5. Nervous Mechanism______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Cardiovascular centers in medulla: 1-Pressor area: CAC and VCC. 2-Depressor area: CIC and VDC. Activity of centers is modified by afferents from: 1-Receptors inside cardiovascular system. 2-Receptors outside cardiovascular system. 3-High centers and blood gases changes: .Mild ↓ O2, ↑ CO2 → ↑ ABP. .Severe ↓ O2, ↑ CO2 → ↓ ABP and death.

  6. Cardiovascular centers______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

  7. Cardiovascular centers______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

  8. Capillary fluid shift mechanism____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ↑ blood volume ↑ ABP ↑ capillary hydrostatic pressure ↑ filtration from plasma to tissue fluid ↓ plasma volume ↓ VR ↓ ABP. ↓ ABP ↓ capillary hydrostatic pressure ↓ filtration at arteriolar end of capillaries ↑ reabsorption at venular end ↓ plasma volume ↑ VR ↑ ABP. i.e, tissue fluid acts as a reservoir of plasma.

  9. Hormonal Regulation of ABP____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Kidney regulates ABP by regulating plasma volume and extracellular fluid volume. When ABP drops: 1-Renin-angiotensin system. 2-Atrial mechanoreceptors.

  10. Arterial Pulse___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ It is a propagated wave that travels along the wall of arteries as blood is forced into aotra. Clinical significance of palpation of radial pulse: 1-Rate. 2-Rhythm. 3-Pulse deficit. 4-Force of ventricular contraction. 5-Force equality on both sides. 6-State of arterial wall.

  11. Capillary Circulation____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Equilibrium with interstitial fluid and exchange of materials across capillary wall occur by 2 mechanisms: 1- Diffusion. 2- Filtration.

  12. Diffusion____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Diffusion____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ It is passive occurs on both directions and concerned with H2O & dissolved substance. Factors affecting diffusion rate: .Factors in substance: 1-Concentration gradient. 2-Solubility. 3-Molecular weight. Factors in capillary permeability: 1-Liver capillaries. 2-Muscle, skin, heart and lung capillaies. 3-Kidney and intestine capillaries.

  13. Filtration____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Filtration____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ It is a passive flow across capillaries in one direction. It is the bulk transport of H2O, electrolytes and crystalloids. Factors affecting filtration: 1-Forces tending to move fluid outwards: . Hydrostatic capillary pressure. . Interstitial fluid colloidal OP 2-Forces tending to move fluid inwards: . Colloidal OP of plasma proteins. . Hydrostatic pressure of interstitial fluid.

  14. Variation in the bulk flow____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1- Decrease colloidal OP of plasma proteins: Liver and kidney diseases ↑ filtration. 2-Increase capillary blood pressure as in venous obstruction ↑ filtration. 3-Increase capillary permeability as in activity, inflammation, albumin goes out ↑ filtration. 4-Decrease hydrostatic pressure of tissue fluid ↓ filtration.

  15. Edema____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Edema____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Excessive infiltration of plasma fluid into tissue fluid leading to accumulation of tissue fluid. Edema may be generalized or localized. Causes: 1-↑ capillary blood pressure: cardiac edema, pregnancy edema and localized edema. 2-↓ colloidal OP of plasma proteins: nutritional, hepatic and renal edema. 3-↑ capillary permeability: allergy, inflam. 4-Lymphatic obstruction: Filaria, cancer.

  16. Venous Circulation____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Central venous pressure (CVP): Pressure in right atrium & veins opening into it. Normal value: 0-2 mmHg. CVP fluctuates with respiration & cardiac cycle. Importance: - CVP ↓ in hemorrhage. - CVP ↑ in heart failure.

  17. Functions of Veins___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1-Transport vessels. 2-Capacitance vessels or blood reservoir: Capacity is a ratio= Change in volume Change in pressure

  18. Effects of gravity on venous return________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1-Orthostatic hypotension. 2-Pressure in different veins during orthostasis. . Pressure in leg veins. . Pressure in superior sagital sinus

  19. Mechanisms helping venous return against gravity in standing position____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1-Sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone. 2-Muscular pump. 3-Thoracic pump. 4-Cardiac suction: . Atrial suction. . Ventricular suction.

  20. Comparison of Pulmonary & Systemic Circulation

  21. Coronary Circulation____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Anatomical considerations: Right & left coronary arteries arise from coronary sinuses behind aortic valve. Left coronary artery supplies anterior & lateral parts of left ventricle. Right coronary artery supplies right ventricle and posterior part of left ventricle. Venous blood of left ventricle drains into coronary sinus (75% of coronary blood). That of right ventricle goes through small anterior cardiac veins directly to right atrium.

  22. Regulation of coronary blood flow______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1-Autoregulation (intrinsic mechanism): ↑ cardiac work → hypoxia, ↑ CO2, ↑ H+ ,↑ K+, Lactate, prostaglandins & adenosine ------→ Coronary VD. 2-Mechanical regulation: .During systole → ↓ coronary blood flow. .During diastole → ↑ coronary blood flow. 3-Neural factors: .Sympathetic: α-adrenergic (VC),β-adren (VD) .Parasympathetic (vagus): VD.

  23. Cardiovascular homeostasis in health & disease____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Circulatory shock: It is inadequate tissue perfusion due to ↓ CO Types & causes: 1-Hypovolemic: Hge, burn, trauma, surgery. 2-Disributive: fainting, anaphylaxis. 3-Cardiogenic: MI, CHF, arrhythmias. 4-Obsructive: obstruction of blood flow.

  24. Hemorrhagic Shock__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Manifestations: ↓ ABP ↑ Heart rate ↑ Respiratory rate ↓ skin temperature Pallor Thirst Oliguria Acidosis.

  25. Compensatory reactions to hemorrhagic shock____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Rapid compensatory reactions: 1-Nervous factors. 2-Humoral factors. Long-term compensatory reactions: 1-Correction of plasma volume. 2-Correction of plasma proteins. 3-Correction of red cell mass.

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